Rel
Exact
regex
News
About
Dictionaries
Articles
RSS List
Home
S
>
American Idioms
>
Idioms & More!
>
English — ESL
>
Dictionaries
Dictionaries
English — ESL
Extra
Idioms & More!
American Idioms
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Still need more
Articles
Online Lessons
English for Russians
Russian language
Famous sayings and expressions
Articles
About the site
sail
© 2008 Copyrighted
by A. Makkai, M.T. Boatner, J.E. Gates
[sail] See: SET SAIL, RAKE THE WIND OUT OF ONE'S SAILS.
Source: A Dictionary of American Idioms
To upper section: S
↑ Grab this Headline Animator
Subscribe to Learn American Idioms day-by-day by Email
See also »
set sail
[set sail] {v. phr.} To begin a sea voyage; start sailing. * /The ship set ...
A Dictionary of American Idioms
sail close to the wind
[sail close to the wind] {v. phr.} To be on the borderline between legality and ...
A Dictionary of American Idioms
American Idioms
American Idiomatic Expressions This online dictionary of idioms is based on original book by ...
Dictionary of American Idioms
sail under false colors
[sail under false colors] {v. phr.} 1. To sail a ship, often pirate, under the ...
A Dictionary of American Idioms
sail (right) through
[sail (right) through] {v. phr.} To conclude easily and rapidly; finish something. * /The bright ...
A Dictionary of American Idioms
sail into
[sail into] {v.}, {informal} 1. To attack with great strength; begin hitting hard. * /George ...
A Dictionary of American Idioms
take the wind out of one's sails
[take the wind out of one's sails] {v. phr.} To surprise someone by doing better ...
A Dictionary of American Idioms
Latest news »
RSS-feeds
We have added RSS functionality to the site. At present you can subscribe to any of the following RSS feeds: search (keywords), ...
© 2006—2008 www.sky-net-eye.com